
Aperture | Photography
Aperture is a not-for-profit organization that connects audiences though photography—in print, in person, and online.
PI_Harlem_Photo_Hi_Res_9 | Aperture
Aperture is a nonprofit publisher dedicated to creating insight, community, and understanding through photography.
Aperture Celebrates 2025 Gala
Oct 30, 2025 · Proceeds from the gala and auction sustain Aperture’s work as a nonprofit leader in the field of photography, including its award-winning publications, educational initiatives, touring …
2025 Aperture Gala
It’s Aperture’s most significant fundraising event of the year, and provides vital support for our programming and publications, in pursuit of our mission to create insight, community, and …
The Quarterly Magazine of Photography and Ideas - Aperture
Since 1952, Aperture has been required reading for everyone seriously interested in photography. Now you can access in-depth interviews with master and emerging photographers.
Looking Back at Twenty Years of the Aperture Portfolio Prize
Dec 19, 2025 · The Aperture Portfolio Prize spotlights new talents in contemporary photography. Since 2006, over one hundred artists from around the world have filled the ranks of winners and runners …
Aperture’s Must-Read Photography Features of 2025
Dec 17, 2025 · by Erin O’Toole, from Aperture No. 258, “ Photography & Painting ” Since the late 1960s, Kunié Sugiura has defied the expectations of the art world with hybrid, dreamlike forms that test the …
Tyler Mitchell: Wish This Was Real (2025) | Aperture Photobooks
She is an award-winning art and cultural historian whose books and edited volumes include The Rise (2014), the “Vision & Justice” issue of Aperture magazine (2016), Carrie Mae Weems (2021), The …
Is the Age of Oversized Photobooks Over? - aperture.org
Feb 28, 2025 · Is the Age of Oversized Photobooks Over? Like diaries or zines, small-scale publications have both an intimacy and air of rebellion. Featured in Aperture No. 257
Essays - Aperture
For Aperture ’s summer issue, “Liberated Threads,” guest editor Tanisha C. Ford explores fashion’s ability to create possibilities for solidarity and selfhood across the African diaspora.